Frazier was allegedly angry with another teen in his neighborhood and allegedly placed the bomb on the front porch of the teen’s home, where it exploded but did not start a fire, Willis police Sgt. Kevin Rooney previously said.

A neighbor called police after witnessing Frazier allegedly running from the teen’s home and down the street to his house, Rooney previously said. No one was injured.

Frazier allegedly told police that he learned how to make the bomb after watching an instruction video on YouTube. He allegedly admitted making the bomb and delivering it to the teen’s doorstep after originally denying any connection to the incident, Rooney previously said.

But while Frazier threw a water bottle filled with some sort of material causing it to explode, he threw it in the yard and not toward the porch or the house, said Will Harrison, Frazier’s appointed defense attorney.

“It caused no damage,” Harrison said. “I don’t think what he did meets the definition of arson. I think it’s criminal mischief.”

The creation of an explosive device falls under the felony of arson if a person “starts a fire, regardless of whether the fire continues after ignition, or causes an explosion with intent to destroy or damage” any building, habitation or vehicle when the person is “reckless about whether the burning or explosion will endanger the life of some individual or the safety of the property of another,” according to the Texas Penal Code.

Under the Penal Code, criminal mischief occurs when a person “ ... without the effective consent of the owner, intentionally or knowingly damages or destroys the tangible property of the owner.”

If he is convicted of the second-degree felony, Frazier faces two to 20 years in prison and a fine up to $10,000.